Dictionary Definition
torpor
Noun
1 a state of motor and mental inactivity with a
partial suspension of sensibility; "he fell into a deep torpor"
[syn: torpidity]
2 inactivity resulting from torpidity and lack of
vigor or energy [syn: listlessness, torpidity, torpidness]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -ɔː(r)pə(r)
Synonyms
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
- French: torpeur
- German: Erstarrung
- Ido: torporo
- Spanish: torpeza
- Chinese: 迟缓(chi2,huan3)
- Hebrew: אדישות
Extensive Definition
Torpor is a (usually short-term) state of
decreased physiological activity in an animal, usually
characterized by a reduced body temperature and rate of metabolism.
Animals that go through torpor include birds (even tiny hummingbirds) - notably
Cypselomorphae
- and some small mammals such as bats. During the active part of
their day, these animals maintain normal body temperature and
activity levels, but their body temperature drops during a portion
of the day (usually night) to conserve energy. Torpor is often used
to help animals survive during periods of colder temperatures,
since it allows the organism to save the amount of energy that
would normally be used to maintain a high body temperature.
Torpor may extend for a longer period of time.
Some animals such as groundhogs, chipmunks,
ground squirrels and jumping mice
enter this intensely deep state of hibernation for the duration
of the winter. Lungfish switch to
the torpor state if their pool dries out; tenrecs switch to the torpor
state if food is scarce during the summer (in Madagascar). Black
bears, although often thought of as hibernators, do not truly enter
a state of torpor: While their body temperatures lower along with
respiration and heartbeat, they do not decrease as significantly as
most animals in a state of torpor. Still, there is much debate
about this within the scientific community: Some feel that black
bears are true hibernators that employ a more advanced form of
hibernation.
Other uses of the word
- Torpor is alternately used as a reference to any non-physiological state of inactivity. As an example, recently naturalists have learned that the female crocodile enters a deep torpor without aggression during their short egg laying period.
- Torpor is also used in vampire mythology, to describe the state that a vampire enters during the daylight hours. In some legends and fiction, torpor also refers to a period of indefinite hibernation entered by vampires who have gone long periods of time without feeding on blood, or those who've suffered mortal wounds but have not been destroyed.
See also
torpor in German: Torpor
torpor in French: Léthargie
torpor in Polish: Torpor
torpor in Portuguese: Torpor
torpor in Turkish: Uyuşukluk
torpor in Ukrainian: Торпор
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abeyance, abidingness, acedia, aloofness, apathy, ataraxia, ataraxy, benumbedness, blah, blahs, boredom, catalepsy, catatonia, changelessness, coma, comatoseness, constancy, deadliness, deathliness, detachment, disinterest, dispassion, dormancy, drowsiness, dullness, durability, durableness, duration, endurance, enervation, ennui, entropy, fatigue, firmness, fixedness, frozenness, hardening, heartlessness, heaviness, hebetude, hopelessness, idleness, immobility, immovability, immovableness, immutability, inactivity, inanimation, inappetence, indifference, indolence, inertia, inertness, insouciance, invariability, invariableness, inveteracy, jadedness, just being, lack of
appetite, lackadaisicalness,
languidness,
languishment,
languor, languorousness, lassitude, lastingness, latency, laziness, lenitude, lentor, lethargicalness,
lethargy, lifelessness, listlessness, long
standing, lotus-eating, mere existence, mere tropism, nonchalance, numbness, oscitancy, passiveness, passivity, permanence, permanency, perpetualness, persistence, persistency, phlegm, phlegmaticalness,
phlegmaticness,
plucklessness,
pococurantism,
quiescence, resignation, resignedness, rigidity, satedness, sleep, sleepiness, sloth, slothfulness, slowness, sluggishness, solidity, somnolence, sopor, soporifousness, spiritlessness, spunklessness, stability, stagnancy, stagnation, standing, stasis, steadfastness, stolidity, stupefaction, stupor, supineness, suspense, torpidity, torpidness, torpitude, unchangeability,
unchangingness,
unconcern, vegetation, vis inertiae,
weariness, withdrawnness,
world-weariness